FDIC Shuts Down Four Banks: 20 Banks Closed In 2010

MARCY GORDON   02/19/10 09:26 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Regulators shut four banks from California to Florida on Friday, boosting to 20 the number of U.S. bank failures this year following the 140 closures last year in the worst financial climate in decades.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. took over La Jolla Bank, FSB, in La Jolla, Calif. The bank had 10 branches and about $3.6 billion in assets and $2.8 billion in deposits.

Also seized was George Washington Savings Bank in Orland Park, Ill. It had four branches and about $412.8 million in assets and $397 million in deposits.

The FDIC said OneWest Bank in Pasadena, Calif., agreed to assume all deposits and essentially all assets of La Jolla Bank. The takeover is expected to cost the deposit insurance fund an estimated $882.3 million.

The FDIC and OneWest will share losses on about $3.3 billion of the failed bank's loans and other assets.

Meanwhile, FirstMerit Bank, National Association of Akron, Ohio, agreed to take over deposits at George Washington Savings Bank. FirstMerit is also taking over essentially all the assets. For George Washington, the FDIC predicts the takeover will cost the insurance fund $141.4 million.

The loss-sharing agreement for George Washington covers $324.2 million in assets.

The other seized banks were smaller and located in Florida and Texas. They were Marco Community Bank, with a single office on Marco Island, a wealthy barrier island near Naples on Florida's Gulf Coast, and La Coste National Bank of La Coste, Texas.

Marco Community Bank had about $119.6 million in assets and $117.1 million in deposits. Mutual of Omaha Bank, a division of the big insurance company Mutual of Omaha, agreed to assume the assets and deposits of Marco Community Bank.

The failure of Marco Community Bank will cost the deposit insurance fund an estimated $38.1 million.

In addition, the FDIC and Mutual of Omaha Bank, which is based in Omaha, Neb., agreed to share losses on $104.8 million of the failed bank's loans and other assets.

Florida is among the states with the highest concentration of bank failures and where the meltdown in the real estate market brought an avalanche of soured mortgage loans. Last year saw the failure of 14 banks in the state. Also high on the list are California, Georgia and Illinois.

La Coste National Bank had a single branch and $53.9 million in assets. Deposits totaled $49.3 million.

Community National Bank of Hondo, Texas, agreed to buy the deposits and assets of La Coste National Bank – whose failure is expected to cost the insurance fund $3.7 million.

As the economy has weakened, with unemployment rising, home prices tumbling and loan defaults soaring, bank failures have accelerated and sapped billions of dollars out of the federal deposit insurance fund. It fell into the red last year.

The 140 bank failures last year were the highest annual tally since 1992, at the height of the savings and loan crisis. They cost the insurance fund more than $30 billion. There were 25 bank failures in 2008 and just three in 2007.

The FDIC expects the cost of resolving failed banks to grow to about $100 billion over the next four years.

The agency mandated banks prepay about $45 billion in premiums last year, for 2010 through 2012, to replenish the insurance fund.

Depositors' money – insured up to $250,000 per account – is not at risk, with the FDIC backed by the government. Besides the fund, the FDIC has about $21 billion in cash available in reserve to cover losses at failed banks.

Banks have been especially hurt by failed real estate loans, both residential and commercial. Banks that had lent to seemingly solid businesses are suffering losses as buildings sit vacant. As development projects collapse, builders are defaulting on their loans.

Smaller banks are more vulnerable to the losses than their bigger Wall Street counterparts, because commercial real estate makes up a larger portion of their portfolio.

If the economic recovery falters, defaults on the high-risk loans could spike. Many regional banks hold large concentrations of these loans. Banks face as much as $300 billion in losses on loans made for commercial property and development, according to a report issued last week by the Congressional Oversight Panel, which monitors the government's efforts to stabilize the financial system.

The report said the defaults could crimp lending and cause the eviction of families from rental properties. Bank failures also could contribute to job losses and hurt the economic recovery.

President Barack Obama recently promoted a $30 billion plan to provide money to community banks if they boost lending to small businesses. The program, which must be approved by Congress, would use money repaid by banks to the $700 billion federal bailout fund.

Hundreds of banks, including major Wall Street institutions, received taxpayer support through that politically unpopular rescue program, enacted by Congress in October 2008 at the height of the financial crisis.

___

AP Business Writer Tim Paradis in New York contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Regulators shut four banks from California to Florida on Friday, boosting to 20 the number of U.S. bank failures this year following the 140 closures last year in the worst financia...
WASHINGTON — Regulators shut four banks from California to Florida on Friday, boosting to 20 the number of U.S. bank failures this year following the 140 closures last year in the worst financia...
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11:09 AM on 03/03/2010
This is insane!

Spread the word.

Video
http://www.thinkbigworksmall.com/mypage/archive/1/29027

Original blog
http://activerain.com/blogsview/1243528/is-the-fdic-killing-short-sales-

snip* "Next, in order to "sweeten the pot", the FDIC stepped in and guaranteed the following: For any residential mortgages where OneWest experiences a loss, the FDIC will step in and cover anywhere from 80%-95% of the loss. The loss is calculated using the ORIGINAL LOAN BALANCE, not the amount that OneWest paid for the loan. "
10:05 AM on 02/20/2010
I wonder if the closing of federal offices in DC & elswhere prevented FDIC from closing bad banks last week? I'm taking gouhlish pleasure at reading of the banks that FDIC closes each Fri. It's doubtful if it's a good sign for the economy when FDIC closes banks each Fri. I think that it's past time for me to ignore my inner gouhl.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
10:02 AM on 02/20/2010
140 bank closures and I've not read or heard of one prosecution! Many of these bankers played fast and loose with depositors' monies and nobody is held accountable? I despair!
10:00 AM on 02/20/2010
Is one of these a small enough to fail bank HP thought you should transfer your money too?
09:07 AM on 02/20/2010
Is she creating TOO BOG TO FAIL with the closing of Banks and redistributing to the LARGER banks to takeover?

What happened to INDYMAC?

Brooksley BORN was her name---Elizabeth Warren is picking up where CONGRESS tore Brooksley to pieces-

REFORM/REGULATION NOW!

If you really want to understand DERIVATIVES- go back to 1997

http://bit.ly/HY3qJ -- (FRONTLINE)

IF you dare to watch this- you will be furious but it all will make so much more sense!
07:44 AM on 02/20/2010
The loses by these banks represents money STOLEN from the taxpayers by "white collar criminals" Who the h$ll came up with the idea that if you wear a suit and tie, you should be judged differently.
06:33 AM on 02/20/2010
Sheila Bair is probably one of the few feds. that is doing the job.
05:47 AM on 02/20/2010
"Depositors' money – insured up to $250,000 per account – is not at risk, with the FDIC backed by the government."

FDIC backed by the government
FDIC backed by the government
FDIC backed by the government
FDIC backed by the government

Who is the the government?
05:37 AM on 02/20/2010
Progressives have no clue what is about to unfold...and they are not prepared.
06:32 AM on 02/20/2010
Sure you are absolutely correct, but conservatives are just as clueless and all they have to offer is jingoism.
04:51 AM on 02/20/2010
The economy is fine.

Nothing to see here.

Move along.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William Young
Liberal from Texas!!
07:14 AM on 02/20/2010
John Mccain, is that you?
04:00 AM on 02/20/2010
Hey look! It's another billion dollars of our money flying out the window!
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
01:53 AM on 02/20/2010
The banks unable to stay afloat should welcome stricter regulation.
01:48 AM on 02/20/2010
As a Florida resident, I have noted that the bank failures in Florida have been concentrated in Central and South Florida. Unfortunately, the economies of those areas are primarily tourist-driven, and when tourism is down, so are the local economies. These are also the areas that saw run-away housing costs during the "boom" times.

North Florida has largely avoided the failure of community and regional banks because it does not depend on the tourism industry making it less sensitive to imported (tourist) dollars and never had the same level of escalation in housing costs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnintn
12:06 AM on 02/20/2010
The more I read, the more I suspect the bottom has already fallen out of the commercial real estate market and right now a bunch of regional banks are like characters on an old Looney Tunes cartoon - still running in mid-air for a few secondsbefore looking at the camera, pulling out a small sign that says "Yelp" and then dropping with a puff of smoke left in the air above them. FDIC better plan on including more days of the week to announce bank closures than just Fridays, otherwise it could get like reading lists of Vietnam war dead.
11:50 PM on 02/19/2010
t'is friday

duh